Tag Archives: ntobeko ngcamu

A Thank You Letter From Ntobeko

Ntobeko Ngcamu has been working for PeacePlayers – South Africa for almost its entire existence. He joined the organization back in 2003 as a coach and now oversees the life skills program. Recently, a group of individuals who are familiar with Ntobeko’s dedication to the organization, including former PPI-SA fellows, combined resources to award Ntobeko with a two-year bursary which enables him to pursue a degree in social work at the University of KwaZulu-Natal . The program commences in February 2013. Upon hearing the great news, Ntobeko wrote a thank you letter to those who have supported him. We feel his letter highlights the strength and bond of PPI family and the power of the program to change and enhance lives. A copy of the letter follows:

After joining PPI-SA in 2003 as a coach, Ntobeko Ngcamu now coordinates the life skills program and hopes to pursue a university degree with the bursary he has received.

To Whom It May Concern:

Greetings, I trust this note finds you well.

I’m Ntobeko Ngcamu and I would like to extend a sincere thank you for the great help that you have given to enable me to further my studies. I want you to know that I will do everything I can, to use this opportunity to achieve my Dream.

I grew up at Umlazi Township in Durban, KwaZulu Natal, living with my big family in one house. At the time, education was not as important and there were not many opportunities. There was a lot of peer pressure, crime, violence, lack of drive and most of my peers dropped out of school. I knew that if I wanted to be successful, I had to stay in school because of the value of a good education.

While I was still discovering myself, I joined PeacePlayers International as Basketball Coach in 2003 as I wanted to get more involved in helping develop youth in my community. Growing up in the township, I knew the challenges that the youth were facing on daily basis because I had been through the same challenges. I started getting more involved in the Life Skills Program and in 2007 I was appointed as a Life Skills coordinator and I have learned and achieved so much. Helping my community and seeing the difference I was making and being with PeacePlayers International helped me to discover “MY INNER ME” and this is when I knew exactly what I want to become.

With the funds that you raised for me, I’m going to pursue a Social Work

degree. I am confident that all the experience that I received from PeacePlayers International will help me stay motivated to finish my degree and come back to serve PeacePlayers International and my community.

I will give everyone who has supported my education a quarterly update on my progress. I assure you that this will not interfere with my role at PPI however I hope that this can enhance what I already do at PPI.

Again I just want to extend my gratitude and to let you know I’m really honoured with the opportunity.

Thank you

Ntobeko Ngcamu

Ntobeko in a silly hat.

From all of us at PPI-SA and PPI sites around the world, we wish you good luck in your new endeavors Ntobeko!

Leave a Comment

Filed under South Africa

A Letter from Nombuso Dlamini to her PPI-SA Family

Nombuso spent 5 years as a coach and office assistant with PPI-SA.

Recently we said goodbye to Nombuso Dlamini who was a member of the PPI family for five years as a coach, and also worked as our administrative assistant. Nombuso moved on to other opportunities but recently wrote PPI-SA a card in which she expressed her thanks and love for what the PPI-SA family has done for her. We hope that Nombuso’s card can give you an idea of how our PeacePlayers “family” works here in South Africa:

Thanks to PPI!

I’m not sure whether these words would be able to cover all I want to say, but if they don’t, I hope you can understand how full of meaning they are.

You have contributed so much value to my life. I really feel that I wouldn’t be where I am today if it wasn’t for the kind of people (family) that you are. I’ve never been inspired like this, and my attitude has changed for the better because of being around people like you. I can’t forget to thank Nasiphi and Douwie for their motivations. I think Sifiso C. was right when he said you guys should be motivational speakers. I know I have said this beore, but Ntobeko has been more like my uncle overall. Thobani taught me a lot of things about life and was like my mentor. I know that the four hours of life skills meetings we had were meant to prepare kids sessions, but honestly I think I benefitted way more than the kids from them!

Thobani, I’ve never seen such dedication and passion and I really feel that you should be treated like treasure to PPI. Please follow that passion of yours, you rock (ungamadwala). Mtu, I regret I was not on the City-Wide team now that my whole job is event planning! To Marcel, you’re the star. I was looking forward to working with you and learning from you, but I know everyone at PPI-SA will benefit from you joining our organization.

Just a lesson for everyone, especially the Area Coordinators, make sure you use these people and the opportunity you have to learn, all the things we learn at PPI help us in the future. As for everyone, keep that PPI flag up there. I’m proud of being a PPI product, and I know many more people will leave PeacePlayers as better people. “You have changed my perceptions.”

I really miss you guys. I’ve learned so much from all of you.

Love,

Nombuso D.

Nombuso’s ever-present smile and kindness will be missed.

2 Comments

Filed under Global, South Africa

PPI – South Africa Hits the Radio Waves!

PPI-SA Senior Life Skills Coordinator Ntobeko, spread the word on a local radio show about our CityWide Tournament!

Here at PPI-SA we have been working hard to prepare for our 20th annual CityWide Tournament!  The event, which will host over 1,000 participants from 32 Primary Schools in the Durban area, is our biggest event of the year!

Last week, PPI senior life skills coordinator Ntobeko went to local KwaZulu-Natal radio station Izwilomzansi to spread the word about CityWide and to inform the public about the event. We have his interview here translated from Zulu to English! Great job Ntobeko representing PPI! Enjoy the interview!

Interviewer: Who is PPI?

Ntobeko: PPI is an organization using basketball to teach life skills. We have been operating for 10 years and we are still strongly continuing with our program.

Interviewer: Ntobeko this is not your 1st time coming here, we have been working with you for quite some time now, so what would you like to share with us her at Izwilomzansi?

Ntobeko: 1st is that I always come every year in the middle of the year and at the end of the year. But today I’m here to let the listeners in Kwazulu Natal know that Peace Players is having its 20th City Wide Tournament involving all the 7 areas that’s we work in around Durban. This event will be taking place on the 26th of May 2012. From 8:30 – 3:00. We wish that all the parents can come and support their kids and to see what their kids do with us at PPI.

Interviewer: You are known to be working with basketball, so how many teams will participate in this event?

Ntobeko:  We are known for basketball, but on this day we will not only focus on sport. As an organization, PPI also focuses largely on HIV awareness and prevention. For the first time ever, a partner organization that we work closely with, called Zoe life, will be providing free HIV counseling and testing on the day. This is voluntary, no one is forced to test, we just wish to provide the platform for this service, and spread the idea of the importance of knowing your status. On the basketball side, we will have over a thousand participants, from 32 primary schools around Durban. We wish that the households that are listening to come and help out, for we will need their assistance. Also we would like the locals to involve themselves and use our free HIV testing/counseling services.

Interviewer: What’s really is the purpose of PPI and the games you guys are going to host?

Ntobeko: As we have seen during the World Cup in 2010, how people have been friendly to each other just because of Sport. Sport can facilitate discussion around social issues that we face in our daily lives and allows people to unite. Our aim is to have kids share knowledge and talk about things they have as challenges in their lives and find a way that they can overcome those issues. It’s not only about basketball. The great diversity of participants we will have at CityWide allows them to sit down and talk in a peer environment platform, and create friendships with players from different back grounds.

Would you like to hear the original interview in isi-Zulu? Click the link below!

Izwilomzansi interview about City-Wide Tournament (Zulu)

1 Comment

Filed under Global, South Africa

PPI-SA Successfully Trains 37 Basketball Coaches and Peer Educators

PPI-SA peer educators strengthening their facilitation skills before working "in the field".

On Thursday, February 9th and Friday, February 10th, PPI-SA hosted a Life Skills/Facilitation and Basketball training at the Chatsworth Youth Centre for 37 coaches. This year, we have a number of new coaches on board, many of which are graduates of our Primary School and Leadership Development Programs.

Basketball Program Manager Mtu Zulu says:

“Training the ‘new’ coaches this time around was much easier as compared to years past, since all of the new coaches have already been a part of the PPI family. The only difference is that this time around, they are coaches, not participants. They’ve already been exposed to the PPI-SA culture and the ‘PPI Way‘, so I’m confident that once we start programming in our schools next week, we’ll see immediate benefits.”

The majority of PPI-SA's coaches have come through the PPI-SA pipeline - first at the Primary School level, then to the Leadership Development Programme level, now to the coaching level!

The training feedback from Area Coordinator’s and Coaches was nothing but positive. Instead of simply training the coaches how to run sessions/practices drill by drill and activity by activity, a more strategic approach was developed. Topics discussed including the “PPI Coaching Philosophy” and informing the coaches why we’re teaching what we’re teaching. Even the seasoned PPI-SA coaches, who had been through many trainings in the past, were excited and receptive to the new training methodologies.

A huge “High Five” to Ntobeko Ngcamu and Mtu Zulu for working together to plan, coordinate, run and evaluate such an effective coaches training!

PPI-SA officially begins its programming in its 32 Primary Schools and 4 LDP communities on Monday, February 27th.

1 Comment

Filed under Global, South Africa

Circumcision + HIV = ???

Over the course of the past 5 years, advanced medical research through experimental trials has proven that male circumcision can reduce a man’s risk of becoming infected with HIV during heterosexual intercourse by up to 60 percent. This has lead to the World Health Organization and UNAIDS to recommend circumcision as a new form of HIV prevention. This week, PPI-SA’s Senior Life Skills Coordinator, Ntobeko Ngcamu, shares a very powerful story about his circumcision experience at McCord Hospital, who through PEPFAR, USAID and the South African Government, are offering free “same day” circumcision surgery for South African males.

For the past few years, the message was out. Everyone was talking about HIV & circumcision– clinics, schools and the radio (specifically Gagasi FM) was spreading the word about the opportunity for a free circumcision procedure at McCord Hospital in Durban. For the past 6 months, I was trying to find the strength to go through with the procedure. The thing that scared me the most was that you needed to complete an HIV testing and counselling session beforehand. Luckily, I had have been through this experience before with Zoe-Life, a PPI-SA partner, and their counsellors. My nervousness about going for testing comes from the fact that I live in the township of Umlazi, which has some of the highest rates of HIV infection, and that there is a “3-month window period” with current forms of HIV tests, meaning that if I were to contract HIV within the 3 month period of going for testing, it is likely that a positive result would not be displayed. In my opinion, this is also the thoughts and feelings of other South African males, preventing them from going to get circumcised.

As a part of my job as a Senior Life Skills Coordinator at PPI-SA, I was spreading the word about circumcision to our staff, coaches, participants and partner school personnel, while also discussing the topic with friends and family. I wanted to be able to educate people about the advantages of circumcision and be able to answer any questions they might have.

On November 7, 2011, I go to McCord Hospital and am instructed to sit in the Administrative Area with the 40 person limit in the waiting room.

I get there early because if I’m number 41, I won’t be able to go for surgery that day. I end up being number 40.

We fill in our personal biographical details. At this point, no one is talking to each other – it’s very quiet – you could hear a pin drop. We wait 45 minutes to an hour with no one speaking to one another, fearful of what is about to happen with our upcoming individual HIV counselling and testing session.

I then move to the reception area, waiting to go to the counselling session for an HIV test. Patients will go upstairs to proceed with the surgery (if negative), or out of the counselling room (if positive). If positive, the patient will then take a test to measure their “CD4 count” and come back in 7 days for the explanation of the results.

Next, I move to the “Theatre” waiting area. Orientation – We get a brief orientation explaining the advantages of circumcision and how to properly take care of yourself after the circumcision. I then went into the surgery, which lasted only 15-20 minutes after receiving the anaesthetic from the Doctor.

Once you’re done with circumcision, you get “review dates” to see that everything is going as planned after the procedure.

Review Date 1 – November 9th – I meet with the Doctor to make sure that the healing process is going as planned and the bandage is removed. All people that received the surgery that day are back together and individually consult with the surgeon. A person in the waiting room next to me shares the following:

“I can’t wait until I leave here and recover from surgery because now I’ll be able to go have sex with a woman that I love and she’ll be less likely to leave me and sleep with other men, because sex will feel better for her if I don’t wear a condom.”

Review Date 2 – November 14th – I meet with the Doctor individually again to makes sure everything is still going smoothly with the healing process. Overall, the process takes 6 weeks and I have two more visits scheduled with the doctor. A different patient shares the following:

“I can’t wait until I recover from surgery. Since the festive (holiday) season is approaching, I think I’ll be able to sleep with at least 10 different women over the next 2 months. Since I’ll be circumcised, I’m less worried about contracting HIV so I’m excited to have unprotected sex with as many women as I can, and more women will likely have sex with me now that I’m circumcised.”

There is significant room for improvement in what McCord Hospital, PEPFAR, USAID and the South African Government are trying to achieve with their mass circumcision initiative. People are not getting circumcised for the right reasons. In reality, based on people’s attitudes and perceptions from the government program, it is quite possible that the actual number of HIV infections could be higher than if nothing were done.

People need more information and it needs to be delivered in a proper manner. I suggest that during the waiting times in the Admin and Waiting Rooms, there can be educational workshops increasing the knowledge and awareness of the benefits of circumcision. There is no use delivering this message in an unprofessional way, 5-minutes before going in to the circumcision surgery, since our minds at the point are only thinking about what is about to take place with the surgeon’s scissors… A facilitator should educate the patients in a professional way, and then a group discussion could be had where everyone can have the opportunity to discuss their thoughts and feelings in a supportive environment. I think there would be a very positive impact on the patients if this happened.

Thanks for sharing your story with us, Ntobeko. We understand that this was a difficult story for you to share with the public, and doing so speaks volumes about your leadership. We hope that your story informs and inspires readers and all PPI stakeholders, encouraging them to make positive, responsible decisions for their own personal health!

1 Comment

Filed under Global, South Africa

PPI-SA’s Programming Back in Full Swing

PPI-SA Coaches & Staff are excited to get back in the field!

Following a 6-week programmatic break for the School Winter Holiday, PPI-SA’s programs are back in full swing this week. After hosting an all day Basketball and Life Skills Refresher Training at the Chatsworth Youth Centre (a huge thank you to longtime PPI-SA friend, and former Board Member, Clive Pillay, for providing the venue free of charge) this past Friday, PPI-SA’s coaches and staff are ready to go!

PPI-SA Senior Life Skills Coordinator, Ntobeko Ngcamu, and his team were hard at work over the Holiday Break.

What was particularly impressive at this training was the improved facilitation and peer education skills of our coaches. This is a testament to our Life Skills team; Ntobeko Ngcamu, Fathima Moosa, and new Life Skills team member, Thobani Khumalo. The group worked very hard during the holiday break to develop a 2-hour “In-Area” Facilitation training for our coaches, which was held in each of PPI-SA’s 7 areas. Coaches had nothing but positive feedback about the training, and In-Area Facilitation Trainings are something we plan to continue into next semester and beyond.

During the Life Skills portion of Friday’s training, our coaches, in pairs, prepared and presented 6 of the core Primary School Life Skills sessions to a larger group. Session topics included:

1. My Values
2. Smart Decisions
3. Role Models & Personal Relationships
4. Culture & Religion
5. HIV & My Community
6. Gender Equity

Everyone at PPI-SA is extremely excited to get back into the field and work with our nearly 1,000 participants. Given the exceptional trainings provided over the past few weeks, our entire staff is confident and ready to deliver PPI-SA’s curriculum to our participants. Be sure to check in for updates over the coming months!

Leave a Comment

Filed under Global, South Africa